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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 34 - 34
2 Jan 2024
Díaz-Payno P Llorca J Lantada A Patterson J
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Even minor lesions in articular cartilage (AC) can cause underlying bone damage creating an osteochondral (OC) defect. OC defects can cause pain, impaired mobility and can develop to osteoarthritis (OA). OA is a disease that affects nearly 10% of the population worldwide[1], and represents a significant economic burden to patients and society[2]. While significant progress has been made in this field, realising an efficacious therapeutic option for unresolved OA remains elusive and is considered one of the greatest challenges in the field of orthopaedic regenerative medicine[3]. Therefore, there is a societal need to develop new strategies for AC regeneration. In recent years there has been increased interest in the use of tissue-specific aligned porous freeze-dried extracellular matrix (ECM) scaffolds as an off-the-shelf approach for AC repair, as they allow for cell infiltration, provide biological cues to direct target-tissue repair and permit aligned tissue deposition, desired in AC repair[4]. However, most ECM-scaffolds lack the appropriate mechanical properties to withstand the loads passing through the joint[5]. One solution to this problem is to reinforce the ECM with a stiffer framework made of synthetic materials, such as polylactic acid (PLA)[6]. Such framework can be 3D printed to produce anatomically accurate implants[7], attractive in personalized medicine. However, typical 3D prints are static, their design is not optimized for soft-hard interfaces (OC interface), and they may not adapt to the cyclic loading passing through our joints, thus risking implant failure. To tackle this limitation, more compliant or dynamic designs can be printed, such as coil-shaped structures[8]. Thus, in this study we use finite element modelling to create different designs that mimic the mechanical properties of AC and prototype them in PLA, using polyvinyl alcohol as support. The optimal design will be combined with an ECM scaffold containing a tailored microarchitecture mimicking aspects of native AC.

Acknowledgments: This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon Europe research and innovation MSCA PF programme under grant agreement No. 101110000.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 110 - 110
1 Feb 2020
Samuel L Warren J Rabin J Acuna A Shuster A Patterson J Mont M Brooks P
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Background

Proper positioning of the acetabular component is critical for prevention of dislocation and excessive wear for total hip arthroplasty (THA) and hip resurfacing. Consideration of preoperative pelvic tilt (PT) may aid in acetabular component placement. The purpose of this study was to investigate how PT changes after hip resurfacing, via pre and post-operative radiographic analysis of anterior pelvic plane (APP), and whether radiographic analysis of the APP is a reproducible method for evaluating PT in resurfaced hips.

Methods

A consecutive group of 228 patients from a single surgeon who had hip resurfacing were evaluated. We obtained x-rays from an institutional database for these patients who had their surgeries between January 1st, 2014 to December 31st, 2016. Pelvic tilt (PT) was measured by two observers before and after resurfacing utilizing a standardized radiographic technique. Correlation coefficients were calculated for PT measurements between observers, and pre- and post-surgery.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 95 - 95
1 Nov 2018
Gibney R Matthyssen S Steele J Patterson J Zakaria N Ferraris E
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Collagen is a key component of the extracellular matrix in a variety of tissues and hence is widely used in tissue engineering research, yet collagen has had limited uptake in the field of 3D printing. In this study we successfully adapted an existing electronic printing method, aerosol jet printing (AJP), to print high resolution 3D constructs of recombinant collagen type III (RHCIII). Circular samples with a diameter of 4.5mm and 288 layers thick, or a diameter of 6.5mm and 400 layers thick were printed on glass cover slips with print lines of 60µm. Attenuated Total Reflectance Fourier-Transorm Infa-red (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy performed on the 4 of the printed samples and dried non-printed RHCIII samples showed that no denaturation had occurred due to the printing process. Printed samples were crosslinked using EDC [N-(3-Dimethylaminopropyl)-N′-ethylcarbodiimide hydrochloride, Sigma Aldrich] to improve their stability and mechanical strength. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) performed showed a marked difference in the denaturation temperature between crosslinked printed samples and fibrillar non-printed samples and nano-indentation showed that the construct was relatively stiff. Previous results with similar samples have shown that mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) align with and travel parallel to print direction. Results obtained from these samples show signs that they might be applied in other areas such as bone tissue engineering.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 48 - 48
1 Aug 2013
Sciberras N Patterson J MacDonald D
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Few doctors answer their bleep by stating who they are. Answering the phone in a formal manner is of utmost importance in the hospital setting especially by on-call teams who are normally referred patients by other specialties, general practitioners and in some cases by other hospitals.

An audit to evaluate the internal hospital communication was completed. In the first part of this audit, junior doctors within the orthopaedic department at the RAH were bleeped. Doctors were expected to answer by initiating the conversation by stating (1) name, (2) department, (3) grade and (4) a greeting. A list of omissions was recorded. If the call went through switchboard, it was expected that the hospital name was stated. The second part of the audit extended to other specialties in the RAH as well as orthopaedic departments in hospitals within the Greater Glasgow and Clyde health board (NHS GGC).

Forty-three bleeps were made to doctors of various grades over a period of two months. Nine bleeps (two from other hospitals) were not answered. Five doctors answered their bleep in full. Only twenty-one doctors stated their name whilst eleven stated their grade. In both instances the department was not necessarily stated. The results were similar between the different departments as well as between the seven hospitals offering an orthopaedic service within NHS GGC. Of the thirteen on-call doctors that were bleeped as an external call through switchboard, only one doctor stated the hospital name. This has implications since most hospitals within NHS GGC share a common switchboard.

These results emphasise the need for a protocol within NHS GGC for a standard etiquette for intra and inter hospital communication to ensure that patient safety and confidentiality is safeguarded.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 348 - 348
1 May 2009
Burrows S Patterson-Kane J Fleck R Becker D
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Elastic energy-storing tendons including the equine superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT) and human Achilles tendon significantly increase locomotor efficiency, but suffer high injury rates and experience increased core temperatures during exercise. Tenocytes are linked by gap junctions (GJ) comprised of connexin (Cx) proteins that mediate intercellular communication and are necessary for strain-induced collagen synthesis. The effects of hyperthermia on gap junction intercellular communication (GJIC) are unknown. We investigated the hypothesis that there is a down regulation in GJIC and Cx protein by tenocytes in response to hyperthermic episodes similar to those experienced in the SDFT of galloping horses.

Monolayers of equine SDFT-derived cells were heated to 45°C for 10 minutes. GJIC, Cx43 and Cx32 protein expression and cell viability were measured by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) and immunofluorescent labelling respectively.

There was a marked reduction in GJIC (p=< 0.0001) compared with controls (37oC) at 30min and 1h post-heating, with significant recovery by 2h (p=< 0.0001). The number of Cx43 plaques/cell also decreased significantly at 30mins (p=< 0.05), 1h (p=< 0.0001) and 2h (p=< 0.0001). There was however a 3-fold increase in the number of Cx32 plaques/cell at 1h (p=< 0.0001) that returned to normal by 2h. There was little change in cell viability up to 2h, however by 24h post-heating there was an 80% decrease in cell number indicating significant levels of cell death (p=< 0.0001).

Reductions in GJIC following exercise-induced hyperthermia may inhibit tenocyte collagen synthesis. Connexin isotypes may differentially modulate tenocyte collagen synthesis, therefore the dissimilar alterations in Cx43 and Cx32 following heating could have functional importance. The return of GJIC a few hours post-heating might facilitate spread of apoptotic death signals, killing neighbouring cells which would have otherwise escaped death. Understanding the responses of GJ to increased temperature, and the effects of this on viability and collagen synthetic capacity is likely to increase our knowledge of how exercise-induced SDFT core degeneration accumulates.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 380 - 380
1 Oct 2006
Stanley R Patterson-Kane J Ralphs J Goodship A
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The energy-storing human Achilles tendon and equine superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT) show no adaptation to exercise unlike muscle and bone, and are prone to injury. Injury involves microdamage accumulation until there is sufficient weakening for rupture to occur during normal athletic activity. Anatomically opposing positional tendons, such as the common digital extensor tendon (CDET) in the horse rarely suffer exercise–induced injury. Tenocytes maintain the extra-cellular matrix, but in energy-storing tendons they appear unable to adequately repair microdamage as it occurs. Tenocytes have been classified subjectively into 3 subtypes on the basis of histological nuclear morphology. Long, thin type 1 cells are thought to be less synthetically active than cigar-shaped type 2 cells, but their exact morphology and relative proportions in different tendon sites and ages has not been clearly defined. We hypothesised that tenocytes are separable into morphologically distinct subtypes, reflecting differences in age and functional requirements within and between specific tendons. Samples were taken from tensional and compressed regions of the SDFT and CDET of 5 neonates, 5 foals (1–6 m), 5 young adults (2–6 y) and 5 old horses (18–33 y) Cell nuclei were counted and measured in digital images from histological sections by computerised image analysis. Total tenocyte densities and proportions of the 3 subtypes were calculated for each age group, as were nuclear length:width ratios. Length:width ratio distributions for all horses were evaluated using a normality test followed by a paired t-test. There was a significantly higher total cellularity in the SDFT than the CDET, with a higher proportion of type 1 tenocytes in the CDET. With age, total cellularity decreased in all tendon sites and an increase in the proportion of type 1 tenocytes was observed in tensional regions. Foal and neonatal tendons contained significantly higher proportions of type 2 tenocytes than older tendons. The morphology of the two main subtypes in all age groups was significantly different; type 1 tenocytes had a higher nuclear length:width ratio (mean ± SD = 9.6 ± 2.5) than type 2 (mean ± SD =4.7 ±1.1) (p< 0.001). We were able to objectively separate tenocytes into 3 distinct subtypes based on nuclear length:width ratio measurements. There were significant differences in proportions of subtypes with tendon site and age. The positional tendon had significantly lower cellularity and a higher proportion of type 1 tenocytes; these cells may be less functionally active but sufficient to maintain the matrix in a tendon which is not subjected to high levels of strain. The SDFT continues to grow up to 2 years of age and is subjected to high strains, explaining the need for relatively higher proportions of type 2 cells. There is however an age-related increase in type 1 cells in both tendons which may explain an inability of the adult energy-storing tendon to adapt to exercise and to repair microdamage. Understanding the stimulus for age-related changes in tenocyte subtype proportions in tendons with different functions may help us understand the pathogenesis of exercise-induced tendon injury and to develop more appropriate training regimens.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 88-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 416 - 416
1 Oct 2006
Stanley R Edwards L Ralphs J Goodship* A Patterson-Kane J
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Injury to the core region of energy-storing tendons is a frequent occurrence in both human and equine athletes, the incidence of which increases with age. Such energy-storing tendons include the human Achilles tendon (AT) and the equine superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT). By definition, energy-storing tendons experience high strains during high-speed athletic activity. In contrast, anatomically opposing tendons (“positional” tendons), such as the common digital extensor tendon (CDET) in the horse and extensor digitorum longus tendon in man act only to transmit muscular force and rarely suffer exercise–induced injury. Functional adaptation of muscle and bone in response to exercise is well – documented, but there has been no convincing evidence to suggest that the energy-storing tendons in adults have the ability to adapt to exercise. We hypothesised that adaptive increases in tenocyte cellularity would occur in the energy-storing and positional tendons of young horses subjected to three specific exercise regimens. Samples were taken from midmeta-carpal regions of the SDFT (periphery and core) and CDET of young Thoroughbred horses from the following groups. Group 1: 6 horses exercised on a high-speed treadmill for 18 months from 21.3 months of age (SD 1.1) with 6 age-matched controls that underwent walking exercise only (long-term); Group 2: 6 horses exercised on a high-speed treadmill for 18 weeks from 19.4 months of age (SD 0.6) with 6 age-matched controls that underwent walking exercise only (short-term) and Group 3: 6 horses trained on pasture in New Zealand for 18 months beginning at 7–10 days of age, with 6 age-matched controls kept at pasture with no additional enforced exercise (Global Equine Research Alliance). Tenocyte nuclei were counted and measured in digital images from histological sections stained with haematoxylin and eosin, by computerised image analysis. Tenocyte densities (per mm2) for exercised and control groups for each study were evaluated using paired t-tests. Tenocyte density was significantly higher in the CDET of exercised horses in Group 3 (mean ± SD =260.4 ± 23.4) compared with the non – exercised controls (mean ± SD =226.9 ± 23.8) (p < 0.01). There was no such difference in the SDFT (core or periphery). There was also no significant exercise-related difference in tenocyte density in either the SDFT (core or periphery) or CDET for Groups 1 or 2. No previous data is available on the effect of exercise on tenocyte populations in equine tendons. The lack of other adaptive changes in previous studies of mature equine tendons had raised the question as to whether immature tendons would be more able to adapt to mechanical stimuli. In this study we were able to show that beginning training of horses shortly after birth (Group 3) stimulated an adaptive response by tenocytes in the positional CDET but not the SDFT. The inability of energy-storing tendons to show functional adaptation to exercise in immature or mature animals may explain the high incidence of strain-induced injury. Understanding the pathway by which exercise-related increases in tenocyte densities occur in immature positional but not energy-storing tendons may increase our understanding of the pathogenesis of strain-induced tendon injury.